I don’t know if it comes as a surprise to anyone that Omniture knows how to put on a good show. The SLC Summit 08 meetings wrapped up this evening and now all that’s left is a day’s worth of skiing. Work hard, play hard, you know how the saying goes.

For those who attended the event, I imagine that Lance Armstrong’s keynote and the Flight of the Concords performance will be top-of-mind and tip-of-tongue, but the keynote that really made me think about things belonged to Seth Godin.

First of all, his delivery is fantastic. He’s entertaining, he’s funny, and he’s spontaneous, but his subject matter is also fascinating. He didn’t talk about analytics. He talked about how marketing is changing and how it’s no longer enough for marketers to shout at people and expect them to listen. We don’t have to listen to marketers anymore, because we have so many other things we can pay attention too.

A marketers new role is to make a remarkable product. He defined remarkable as something worthy of making a remark about. That’s all. People talking about your product means people are spreading your idea. Ideas that spread win.

Working at Omniture means that I have fairly easy access to SiteCatalyst. I’ve been running Google Analytics on my blog for over a year now, and I’m nearing my one year anniversary of starting at Omniture (April). I figured it’s probably time for me to take my own medicine.

I haven’t done any real programming since leaving school and even then it was Rails or Java. I’ve dabbled in PHP, but I’ve never done JavaScript. Ever. Turns out that programming languages are just programming languages. The logic is the same and the syntax is all that changes (this is obviously gross oversimplification, but served my purposes tonight). I looked at the JavaScript on a few of other sites and whipped up my own solution for naming pages and recording internal search terms.

Now there’s no QC department on my MacBook Pro, but I spent about 45 minutes to code, debug, and test my implementation.